Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 49, Issue 5 , Pages 590-601.e12, May 2007

Health Status Among Internally Displaced Persons in Louisiana and Mississippi Travel Trailer Parks

  • Ryan Larrance, MPH

      Affiliations

    • International Medical Corps, Department of Evidence-Based Research, Washington, DC
  • ,
  • Michael Anastario, MA

      Affiliations

    • The Health Institute, Institute for Clinical Research and Health Policy Studies, Tufts–New England Medical Center, Boston, MA.
  • ,
  • Lynn Lawry, MD, MSPH, MSc

      Affiliations

    • International Medical Corps, Department of Evidence-Based Research, Washington, DC
    • Divisions of Women’s Health and General Internal Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, and Department of International Health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress for reprints: Lynn Lawry, MD, MSPH, MSc, International Medical Corps, 1600 K St NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20006; 202-828-5155, fax 202-828-5156

Received 6 September 2006; received in revised form 27 September 2006; accepted 19 October 2006. published online 31 March 2007.

Study objective

We used a global humanitarian aid perspective to assess basic needs, women’s health, mental health, and opinions about the status of internally displaced persons living in travel trailer parks to inform recovery efforts for this population.

Methods

This was a systematic randomized survey of 366 internally displaced persons, conducted with structured questionnaires. The study setting was commercial and group travel trailer parks in Louisiana and Mississippi. Information was gathered about respondent demographics, food security, basic needs, domestic and sexual violence, security concerns, reproductive health, mental health, morbidity, mortality, health care assessment, substance use, and opinions about internally displaced persons and social status.

Results

Respondents were 45.9 (standard deviation 0.8) years of age on average and were mostly white (62%) in Mississippi and mostly black (65%) in Louisiana. Shelter, transportation, security, and lack of financial means were listed as the worst problems since displacement. Sixteen percent of respondents reported not having enough drinking water, and only 13% of those living in counties and parishes under boil orders were doing so. More than half of households reported an ill adult or child in the previous 2 months. The number of parents reporting problems getting children to school more than tripled after displacement. Intimate partner violence rates postdisplacement were 3 times higher than US baseline rates. Fifty percent of respondents met criteria for major depression. Suicide completion rates after displacement were more than 14 times the baseline rates, and attempt rates were more than 78 times baseline.

Conclusion

The health burdens identified present a formidable challenge for the health infrastructures in Louisiana and Mississippi without outside assistance. Those planning and leading recovery efforts must understand internally displaced persons in a more global context and tailor programming that follows well-developed international models of rights-based care.

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 Supervising editors: Eric K. Noji, MD, MPH; William G. Barsan, MDAuthor contributions: RL and LL conducted the research in April and May of 2006 in Louisiana and Mississippi. The text was written jointly by RL, MA, and LL. MA conducted all statistical analyses performed in the article. LL takes responsibility for the paper as a whole.

PII: S0196-0644(06)02619-9

doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2006.12.004

Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 49, Issue 5 , Pages 590-601.e12, May 2007